The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, July 17, 1984 - Page 5 Council proposes security plan By ERIC MATTSON would be minimal. new housing security ordinance, In other action last night, the city's known as the "anti-rape" law, was ItEY AiUEAI AV. proposal to change the boundaries for ome before the Ann Arbor City towing service was blasted by one cillast night -station owner and praised by anther. Ai also to c Coun If passed, the amended ordinance would require landlords to upgrade the locks in many apartments. BUT JEFF DITZ, coordinator of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, said the new ordinance wasn't far-reaching enough. "There's no reason to go backwards, it's time to go forward," he said. Ditz advocated stronger language relating to the dead bolt lock requirement. If passed as proposed, landlords would be required to install dead bolt locks with a one-inch bolt. But locks which were installed before February 1983 only have to have a half- inch bolt to satisfy the ordinance. Ditz said the half-inch bolts simply are not effective against potential burglars and conroversy ueu up rapists, and only a full inch bolt is very effective. "TO ME, IF it makes two people safer, that's fine," Ditz said. Earlier in the meeting, nearly 30 people voiced their concerns over the controversial Barton Pond boathouse. The two-and-a-half hour public hearing centered around whether or not to build a boathouse on Barton Pond for the Michigan Rowing Association, the parent organization of the University of Michigan Rowing Club. RESIDENTS OF affluent Barton Hills, near the pond in Ann Arbor Township, said they were concerned about the boathouse attracting "unde- sirables" to the area. Further, the residents complained, the noise and water pollution resulting from the increase in pond use would be intolerable. But rowing advocates said the benefits of a newdboathouse far out- weight the demerits. REPRESENTATIVES of the rowing community said a new boathouse is necessary for the safekeeping of valuable equipment. They added that the extra noise and water pollution Dennis Brewer, owner of Brewer's North Campus Service Station, said the city shouldn't change the distribution of the city's towing contracts, since he has done such a "good job" for the city. The city tows cars which have ac- cumulated more than six parking tickets. Brewer currently receives about two- thirds of the city's towing business. He would lose business if the boundraries were changed. Clarence Heidenescher, another station owner, said the city should ac- cept competitive bids from other towing services to make the system more equitable. CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA/Doily Splash! Lifeguard David Miller gracefully cools himself from yesterday's scorching heat at Fuller Pool. Reagan condemns WASHINGTON - Portraying communist rule as a tyranny that "puts itself above God," President Reagan said yester- day that the peoples of the Soviet bloc "were taken captives by force and remain captives by force." In a ceremony marking the observance of "Captive Nations Week," the president said that the "ugly, sinister walls" of the Soviet system "continue to deny for the millions trapped behind them the most basic yearnings of the human spirit." HE SIGNED a declaration pledging the United States to renew efforts to encourage freedom and national indepen- dence "for those countries struggling to free themselves from communist ideology and totalitarian oppression." "We condemn all tyrants who deny their citizens human rights, whether they be dictators of the left or the right," he said in cermonies marking the signing of the Captive Nations Week proclamation. In a speech to an audience composed mostly of represen- tatives of groups from Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia and Cuba, Reagan called again on the Kremlin to allow outside observers to determine the condition of Nobel Prize winner Andrei Sakharov and his wife, Yelena Bonner. He said they "are suffering severe persecution and are cut off from the rest of humanity." "THE WORLD demands to know the fate of these two good and courageous people," Reagan said. 'tyrannical nations Michigan Daily 'We condemn all tyrants who7dti s deny their citizens human - 7307 rights..." - President Ronald Reagan Announcing: He also hailed a new $1-billion, six-year plan to upgrade the facilities of the Voice of America, Radio Liberty and Radio Free Europe to beam American news and editorials to eastern Europe and the world. Reagan noted that the Pope recently disapproved of the Marxist Nicaraguan government's inclusion of the Catholic Church on its list of "enemies." "I KNOW I speak for millions of Americans who join the Pope in saying we, too, disapprove; and yes, people of Nicaragua, we, too, suffer with you," Reagan said. He suggested that members of Congress who have refused funds for the CIA-sponsored Nicaraguan rebels "to reflect on the fatal consequences of complacency and isolationism." As he made his way out of the East Room after a standing ovation, reporters asked Reagan how he felt about remarks by prospective Democratic vice presidential nominee Geraldine Ferraro that his domestic policies are unfair and un-Christian. Craig L. Blogin DDS 625 E. Liberty, Suite 202 (Corner of State St.) -General Dental Care for Adults and Children -New Patients Welcome -Emergencies Seen Promptly FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL 668-6612